The Media Server Resources group contains the resources available for the Media Server in the Common Management Portal. You can configure the resources of this group with the Common Management Portal.

The Media Server Resources group contains the resources available for the Media Server in the Common Management Portal. You can configure the resources of this group with the Common Management Portal.

For the Media Server Resources group the Common Management Portal administers the following resources with the described settings.

SIP Domains

For the time being, SIP domains are still of no technical use. They are nonetheless already mandatory for configuring conference devices.

In this case simply create an “auxiliary domain” the settings of which are insignificant.

Office Codes

Each office code is identified by its individual Office Code ID.

An office code represents the general portions of a phone number that precedes the extension number. These are:

Country code – Area code – PBX number

Example: 49 - 89 - 722

Note:

The PBX number is also called the site number or system number.

Note:

An office code should not contain any phone number prefixes.

An office code may contain a so-called overlap. This overlap specifies if and to what extent the office code and the associated extensions overlap.

Example: A fully qualified phone number be 492404902100. The office code is 492404902 and the extension 2100. In this example, one digit of the extension and office code overlap – namely digit 2. The overlap for this example is thus 1.

If an Telephony Control Server office code is to use an overlap, it must be configured via the resource management of the Common Management Portal.

Furthermore, an office code contains the office codes International and National. These codes determine the digits that you must dial for making an international call or for a call outside your own area network.

Private Number Codes

Each private number code is uniquely identified by its individual PN-Code-ID .

With private number codes you can define customer-individual numbering plans of up to three levels in order to map internal corporate structures, for example. The private number code is structured analogously to the central office code and also represents the portions of the phone number that precede the extension number:

Barrier code – Level 2 code – Level 1 code – Level 0 code

Example: 8 – 11 – 22 – 33

Note:

A private number code should not contain any phone number prefixes.

The barrier code indicates that a private number code is involved. The level codes map a customer-individual phone number structure and need not correspond to the “country code - area code - office code” scheme.

A private number code may contain a so-called overlap. This overlap specifies if and to what extent the private number code and the associated extensions overlap.

Example: A fully qualified phone number be 492404902100. The office code is 492404902 and the extension 2100. In this example, one digit of the extension and office code overlap – namely digit 2. The overlap for this example is thus 1.

If a private number code is to use an overlap for Telephony Control Server, it must be configured via the resource management of the Common Management Portal.

Furthermore, a private number code contains the Level 2 prefix and Level 1 prefix. These prefixes are the digits you need to dial for a call outside the relevant level.

Conference Devices

A conference device of the Media Server corresponds to the phone number for an Telephony Control Server.

It defines an extension that is assigned to an SIP domain (SIP domain ID) and to an office code or a private number code.

The conference type specifies whether the device is associated to the conference portal or the voice portal of the Media Server.